Saturday, March 2, 2013

International Contacts: Final Thoughts

I have political opinions that often set me apart from my friends, families, and neighbors.  I am not a patriotic person, and my "love of country" does not even fall on my list of priorities.  I am a citizen of the earth, a global thinker, and a very neutral party.

So, it is no surprise that I am comfortable in an international setting.  I highly value the professional contacts I have made over the past eight weeks and look forward to the possibility of fostering those relationships over the long-term.

One consequence of learning about the international early childhood field is the letting-go of biases and assumptions about the way other cultures view childhood and development. 

Another side-effect of interacting with professionals from around the world is an expanded tolerance for ideas that are unlike my own. 

A third effect resulting from conversations with professionals abroad is a renewed affirmation of my own beliefs and values.  While some biases can be dispelled through a global education, other themes hold true; I have found through my conversation with a British early childhood professional that the heart of our work is very much the same.

My hope for the early childhood field is that opportunities for international collegial relations continue to increase and that practitioners can find their way to the benefits and possibilities held in reaching across borders to learn together.

1 comment:

  1. I love that you consider yourself a global thinker, citizen of the earth, and a neutral party. I am very much like you in that I choose to remove myself from much of the hub-bub of politics because in my personal opinion, I feel that the 2 political party system in this country is set up to divide us. I choose to focus on tangible things I can control and try to make positive changes in the lives of people I encounter in a daily basis. Namely, my students!

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